Helping Hoosiers through the economic crisis
Transcription
Helping Hoosiers through the economic crisis
The Indiana Pro Bono Commission Bridging the Gap to Justice Helping Hoosiers through the economic crisis A promotional supplement to Indiana Lawyer Back home again in Indiana By Hon. Melissa May, Chair Indiana Pro Bono Commission This has been a busy year for the Indiana Pro Bono Commission. In addition to the Commission’s normal duties, our Chief Justice of Indiana, Randall T. Shepard, tasked the May Indiana Pro Bono Commission with helping train more lawyers than any other state to help homeowners facing the loss of their homes. We determined that the best way to train lawyers would be to create a video, which would then be replayed throughout the state. To that end, the Indiana Continuing Legal Education Forum generously agreed to tape that video, at no cost to the Pro Bono Commission. Professor Judith Fox from University of Notre Dame Law School agreed to chair the foreclosure panel of experts. Additional panelists were Professor Alan White from Valparaiso University School of Law, Marcy Wenzler from Indiana Legal Services, Chris Purnell from the Neighborhood Christian Legal Clinic, Christine Jackson, a practitioner from Indianapolis, and Gabrielle Owens from the Indiana Attorney General’s office. These experts put together a threehour seminar, with numerous written materials, which was then replayed over forty different times throughout the state. The administrators of the pro bono districts were invaluable in their assistance by setting up and running these replays. With the help of Monica Fennell, our Executive Director, our plan administrators, ICLEF, our panelists and more people than I can mention, including Attorney General Greg Zoeller, more than 1,000 lawyers, judges and mediators were trained to assist Indiana homeowners facing foreclosure. I wish to express my appreciation for all of the time and hard work all of these people put toward assisting the homeowners of Indiana. In addition to this huge effort, each of the districts have assisted more people than ever before with their legal needs. More lawyers than before have given their time and effort with the tough situations faced by Indiana residents during this economic downturn. The Commission and the districts Plan administrator Timi Sloat receiving recognition at Shepard Dinner from Judge Melissa May for the pro bono districts’ work on foreclosure prevention have also faced the difficulty of decreasing interest rates, reducing the amount of funding available to the districts. The districts should be congratulated for the effort they put forth this year in not only running their programs successfully, but also in understanding the restrictions faced because of reduced funding. The Pro Bono Commission is facing a tough year with decreased income and rising legal needs. I feel confident our members and districts are up for the challenge.■ Indiana Pro Bono Commission Members Hon. Melissa May, Chair Indiana Court of Appeals, 4th District Indianapolis Mary Fondrisi Smith, Carpenter, Thompson, Fondrisi & Cummins, LLC Jeffersonville Hon. David Avery Allen Superior Court Fort Wayne David Friedrich Wilkinson, Goeller, Modesitt, Wilkinson, & Drummy, LLP Terre Haute Alan Burke Burke & Heller Rochester Thomas Davis Frost Brown Todd LLC Indianapolis James Dimos Frost Brown Todd LLC Indianapolis 2 Sue Ann Hartig Legal Aid Society of Evansville, Inc. Evansville Sarah Holterhoff Valparaiso University School of Law Valparaiso Dr. Michael Jenuwine Notre Dame Legal Aid Clinic South Bend Carl R. Pebworth Baker & Daniels, LLP Indianapolis Kimberly Kass Valparaiso University School of Law Valparaiso Stephen Rodriguez Indiana Legal Services Merrillville Jonna Kane MacDougall Indiana University School of Law—Indianapolis Novella Nedeff Indiana University School of Law—Indianapolis Catherine Nestrick Bamberger, Foreman, Oswald and Hahn Evansville Edward Stachowicz Indiana Legal Services Lafayette Hon. Elizabeth Tavitas Lake Superior Court Gary Carwina Weng Indiana University Maurer School of Law Bloomington Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 The plan to help homeowners in need By Elizabeth Daulton, Project Manager, Mortgage Foreclosure Trial Court Assistance Project for the Division of State Court Administration Indiana’s mortgage foreclosure rates are among the highest in the country, largely due to the decline of the automotive and manufacturing industries. In 2008, the state saw 45,934 foreclosures – a more than 50 percent increase since 2003. Foreclosure leads to higher personal bankruptcy rates and depreciates the surrounding neighborhoods, resulting in economic losses for more than just the homeowner. Foreclosure negatively affects creditors, as well. Houses which have been abandoned for an extended period of time are rarely able to recoup the amount owed to the lender. In January 2009, Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard addressed the foreclosure crisis, vowing to train more judges, mediators and lawyers than any other state on how to deal with foreclosure cases. The “Back Home In Indiana – Guiding Homeowners Through Foreclosure” training program began in March with sessions all across the state. Sponsored by the Supreme Court, the Indiana Commission for Continuing Legal Education and the Pro Bono Commission, the program also had the support of the State Bar and the Indiana Continuing Legal Education Forum. All 14 District Plan Administrators worked to encourage local attorneys to serve their community by taking part in the effort to stem foreclosures. By September 2009, Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard, Court of Appeals Judge Melissa May, Attorney General Greg Zoeller and State Senator Karen Tallian travelled to one of the final training sessions in Evansville organized by District 13 Plan Administrator Beverly Corn. Pro Bono Commission Chair Judge Melissa May explained, “The interest shown by our panel of experts and from attorneys and mediators across the state has been heartwarming. It shows the willingness of Indiana attorneys to help their fellow Hoosiers who are facing the loss of their homes.” Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Chief Justice Randall Shepard speaking about foreclosure prevention initiatives with Attorney General Greg Zoeller, Judge Melissa May, and State Senator Karen Tallian in Evansville The announcement that more than 1,000 attorneys, judges, and mediators were trained through the program made headlines across the state. However, the Supreme Court and the Pro Bono Commission made it clear there was more work to be done. New state legislation requires a creditor to notify a homeowner facing foreclosure of the homeowner’s right to participate in a settlement conference. Senate Enrolled Act 492, authored by Senator Tallian, levies a $50 filing fee on all mortgage foreclosure cases and requires that the homeowner be notified of his or her right to request a settlement conference with the lender. A portion of this filing fee will be remitted to the Indiana Supreme Court to conduct training and hire coordinators to organize and assist with these settlement conferences. Very few homeowners have taken advantage of the settlement conference provision. Many individuals who have already received foreclosure documents simply don’t open or read any mail they receive from the lender. Others don’t know precisely what a settlement conference entails or believe that they need to hire an attorney and are unable to afford one. Nearly half of the 400 letters sent to homeowners facing foreclosure March 17, 2010 in Fort Wayne “bounced back” because the homes had already been abandoned. “A settlement conference can be daunting for borrowers during the foreclosure process, especially to face alone,” said Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller. The Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority (IHCDA) reports many of the requested settlement conferences were unsuccessful because one or both parties were not prepared. Homeowners failed to bring the necessary documents, or had not prepared a budget and were unaware of the maximum monthly amount they were able to pay. Lenders sent entry-level employees who had no real authority to agree to any mortgage changes. A clear need existed for more organization between the parties–there was no standard process coordinating the local pro bono districts, courts, lenders, and homeowners. After discussing the situation with a number of trial judges, the Division of State Court Administration (STAD) has partnered with the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority to create a system for coordinating all settlement conferences on a county or district-wide basis. This program was launched on a pilot HOMEOWNERS • page 23 3 Legal needs of the poor study helps increase access to justice By Monica Fennell, Executive Director, Indiana Pro Bono Commission Steve Petteway/Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States As noted by many of the articles in this insert to the Indiana Lawyer, the downturn in the economy has meant that there are more lowincome Hoosiers Fennell who need pro bono assistance. The recent Indiana study of the legal needs of the poor, “Unequal Access to Justice: A Comprehensive Study of the Civil Legal Needs of the Poor in Indiana,” released in fall 2009, helps document that need. Quantifying and classifying legal needs can be crucial to obtaining and allocating resources and training for pro bono and legal aid staff and volunteers. In 2007 and 2008 the study sponsors-the Indiana Bar Foundation, Indiana Legal Services, and the Indiana State Bar Association’s Pro Bono Committee-conducted focus groups, prioritysetting meetings, and a Conclave on the Delivery of Pro Bono Services in Indiana. The study relied on results of a telephone survey of low-income Hoosiers and questionnaires from attorneys, judges, clerks of court, pro bono plan administrators, legal service providers, employees of social service and government agencies serving the poor, and Indiana Legal Services employees, clients, potential clients, and Board members. Legal needs studies in other states have found that low-income households have, on average, anywhere from 1 to 3.5 legal needs. The Indiana study, as with other studies, found that the greatest needs were in the area of consumer finance, family law, housing, public entitlements, and health. On average, 62% of those who sought legal representation from the pro bono districts were unable to obtain it, and 75% of those who applied for assistance from Indiana Legal Services were unable to obtain it. Many of these legal needs continue to go unmet, despite herculean efforts by legal aid providers, private attorneys working pro bono, and government agencies. Identifying the barriers to accessing legal assistance for low-income Hoosiers can be the first step in overcoming those barriers. As the Hawaii study urged, the legal system “is seen as inaccessible, distant, incomprehensible and at times, punitive … People … deserve to have a justice system that they can believe in and in order to create such a system, it is key to identify the barriers that prevent access to justice.” The Indiana study found barriers such as lack of transportation, lack of telephones, immigration status, and limited English proficiency. Even if low-income Hoosiers do know that free legal assistance is available to them, there is also an insufficient number of attorneys serving the low-income population, another barrier found in the study. Along with the dearth of pro bono and legal aid attorneys come long waits for legal assistance, which can also be discouraging. The legal needs studies have shown that the perception of the court and the justice system is affected by whether the litigant has legal assistance. Satisfaction with the legal system and the outcome of the case is much higher for those lowincome households who obtained legal assistance than for those who did not. The Indiana legal needs study goes beyond mere statistics and suggests new directions and programs for increasing access to justice, as do many other state studies. The Indiana study recommended, among other things, the creation of an access to justice commission to “function as an umbrella organization, uniting and coordinating the efforts of the various entities working to address the legal needs of the poor.” The full Indiana legal needs study can be found on the sponsor websites, www. indianajustice.org, www.inbf.org and www.inbar.org, as well as the Indiana Pro Bono Commission website, www.in.gov/ judiciary/probono.■ District 4 sponsors “Know Your Rights Week” at Purdue By Timothy Peterson, District 4 Plan Administrator During the week of April 12th the District 4 Pro Bono Corporation and the Purdue Student Government Supreme Court co-sponsored a “Know Your Rights Week” at Purdue University in West Lafayette. During the week Purdue students heard lectures by Sue Anne Hook from the Indiana University School of Informatics regarding intellectual 4 property and the internet and from local attorneys Hunter Reece and James Gothard discussing criminal law and procedure and landlord-tenant rights. On April 14th the Indiana Court of Appeals held an oral argument in the Fowler Auditorium regarding the case of State ex rel. Mansfield, which involved an appeal of a recount of the 2007 Muncie Mayor’s race in Delaware County. The panel hearing the appeal included Judge Melissa May, Judge Margaret Robb and Judge Cale Bradford. After the oral argument, former Attorney General Steve Carter joined Judge Melissa May in answering student questions regarding the legal and legislative processes and paths to legal careers. The week’s activities culminated in a Talk to a Lawyer Day event in the Purdue University Career Center. Students and faculty were given opportunities to discuss legal problems and answers with local bar members recruited by District 4.■ Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 Ten years of IOLTA in Indiana By Charles Dunlap, Executive Director, Indiana Bar Foundation Indiana’s Interest on Lawyers Trust Account (IOLTA) program has been operating in Indiana for 10 years, and during that time it has had a significant impact on our collective ability to Dunlap help low-income Hoosiers deal with their civil legal needs. During these ten years of operation, the IOLTA program has also experienced several challenges. As is customary with significant milestones like this 10-year anniversary, it is a good time to reflect on the achievements and challenges over the first 10 years. There are three overall themes that I believe deserve some attention in this time of reflection about the first 10 years of IOLTA in Indiana. Of course the entire reason that IOLTA programs exist in the United States is to help provide funding for civil legal aid programs in the various states. When you look at the total amount of revenue generated in Indiana in the first ten years of our IOLTA program, it shows what an important piece of the overall funding for civil legal aid programs in Indiana IOLTA has become. With an average of $1.25 million a year being generated, IOLTA funds account for one of the largest annual sources of funding for Indiana civil legal aid programs. In the span of 10 years, the IOLTA program has been the main funding vehicle behind the Indiana Supreme Court’s statewide pro bono program and has allowed Indiana to become a national leader in how it coordinates, promotes and facilitates pro bono delivery of civil legal services. By structuring the pro bono delivery system as a grassroots locally-driven program, the structure allows local communities to determine the best way to address the pro bono civil legal needs in their community. In addition, by joining this statewide pro bono network with funding from the IOLTA program, it does not encroach on other civil legal aid providers funding sources. When the IOLTA program began in Indiana in 1999, the interest rates on IOLTA accounts were approximately 1.3% but dropped to .30% by 2003. Unfortunately for the Indiana program, when the interest rates dropped so severely and so quickly it was near the beginning of the program’s operation. Indiana had just started to use the IOLTA revenue to begin building up the IOLTA • page 16 LRAP fund helps those who help others By Julie Newhouse, President, Indiana Bar Foundation The Indiana Bar Foundation considers itself to be an important partner in the effort to help bridge the gap in access to justice that too many Hoosiers face. An exciting initiative that the IBF has recently announced to help with this critically important mission is the IBF’s newly renamed Justice Richard M. Givan Loan Repayment Assistance Program (LRAP). This program impacts the ability of civil legal aid providers to do important work around the state by increasing the number of attorneys that work in this area and continuing the ability of these attorneys to keep working in these critical positions. It is a program which the IBF has sponsored for approximately four years but which had to be suspended in 2009 due to lack of funding, primarily due to the low IOLTA revenues in an historically low interest environment. Fortunately, with the help of the Indiana Supreme Court’s initial contribution of Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ $25,000, the program has been reinstated for the 2010 calendar year. The Indiana Supreme Court also agreed to match up to $175,000 in donations towards an endowment fund for the LRAP program. The Court will match the money that the Indiana Bar Foundation raises on a dollar for dollar basis over a two-year period of time. Once fully realized, this will provide a $350,000 principal fund to help stabilize the program against future interest rate fluctuations in the IOLTA program. Lastly, in congruence with the announcement of financial support from the Indiana Supreme Court for the IBF’s LRAP program, the IBF also announced that the fund has been renamed in honor of late Indiana Chief Justice Richard M. Givan. Justice Givan passed away in June 2009. He was known for a lifetime of public service, including 26 years as a jurist on the Indiana Supreme Court, serving 13 of those years as Chief Justice. Justice Givan’s former law clerks were instrumental in renaming the fund March 17, 2010 the Justice Richard M. Givan Loan Repayment Assistance Program and have already made significant initial contributions towards the matching funds provided by the Supreme Court. I urge you to support this extremely important program by making a financial contribution. It is a great opportunity to double your gift through the matching contribution commitment from the Indiana Supreme Court. With the cost of higher education, and specifically law school, increasing significantly each year, new lawyers face the daunting task of repaying thousands of dollars, sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars, of student loans on a starting salary of $40,000. Due to this financial reality, civil legal aid organizations around the state are at a severe disadvantage in hiring and retaining lawyers. This program is a very effective tool to get to the heart of this problem by enabling lawyers to follow their passions and work for a civil legal aid organization and stay there as well. LRAP • page 22 5 National pro bono celebration By Cheryl Zalenski, Director, ABA Center for Pro Bono The first annual National Pro Bono Celebration occurred October 25 through 31, 2009. It was sponsored by the ABA Standing Committee on Proo Bono and Public Service with th the objective of showcasing the impact that pro bono lawyers have upon our nation, its system of justice, its communities and, most of all, the lives of the clients they serve. Additionally, the Celebration n presented an opportunity to recognize, recruit and engage more attorneys in pro bono work. The vision of the Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service was of locally organized events spanning the country during the last week of October, with a nationwide website providing resources and a venue for publicizing events. This vision was more than realized in the months leading up to and during the Celebration itself, demonstrating the importance of pro bono in the legal services system as well as that of each individual who participates in pro bono. The participation and excitement generated by the Celebration generat exceeded expectations. The exc publicity generated for pro p bono lawyers, organizations and legal need was extensive: more than 1,000 articles in newspapers, magazine and online publications; over 600 mentions on Twitter, and m over 70 posts on Facebook. Bar associations, pro bono programs, law schools and others held more than 600 events in 48 states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia and Canada. Celebration activities covered a wide range of activities, limited only by the imaginations and creativity of the planners. The Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service collected the following statistics summarizing the types of events held: Continuing Legal Education Programs .........................................111 Fundraisers ............................................13 Governmental Proclamations .................15 Legal Clinics ........................................130 Media Events .........................................18 New Initiative Kick-offs ............................. 7 Planning Sessions.................................... 5 Recognition Events ................................55 Recruitment Events ................................59 Social Events (no recognition component)...............42 Seminars ...............................................63 Webinars ................................................. 6 Many communities displayed great originality in planning events. For example, Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Sue Bell Cobb raffled herself off for justice. In a letter of welcome to the bar’s new admittees, Justice Cobb encouraged pro bono participation and as an added incentive to sign up with the Volunteer Lawyers Program, agreed to ABA • page 21 100 percent increase in clients served in District 2 By Timi S. Sloat, District 2 Plan Administrator District 2 has made tremendous strides in expanding services to the poor within the community. In 2009 the Volunteer Lawyer Network (District 2) increased the number of assisted clients by over 100%. More than 200 individuals were assisted through four separate Ask a Lawyer programs held throughout St. Joseph and Elkhart Counties. In April 2009 District 2 hired a new Plan Administrator, Timi S. Sloat, an attorney that hails from Elkhart County. In June District 2 partnered with Elkhart Legal Aid Services to further expand pro bono legal services in Elkhart County. This collaboration has resulted in a significant increase in attorney participation and client assistance in Elkhart County. District 2 has also started working more closely with Indiana Legal Services 6 in South Bend to provide pro bono placement for those cases that they are unable to place with their staff attorneys. Additionally, in October 2009 District 2 relocated its offices to a more central location in downtown South Bend. As a result of this move, the program has become a prominent fixture in the central legal district of South Bend. In cooperation with ICLEF and the Indiana Pro Bono Commission, District 2 hosted three separate trainings for attorneys on “Guiding Homeowners through Foreclosure.” With the assistance of Professor Judith Fox, Notre Dame School of Law, and Joseph Zelienski, Indiana Legal Services, District 2 provided interactive and informative trainings on the foreclosure process to 50 attorneys, civil mediators, and housing counselors. During the American Bar Association’s national Celebrate Pro Bono week District 2 distributed 40 “Celebrate Pro Bono October” mugs filled with coffee, tea and chocolate to the outstanding pro bono attorneys throughout the district. These mugs were distributed at our Ask A Lawyer events in St. Joseph and Elkhart Counties and hand-delivered to the offices of other stand-out pro bono attorneys. An attorney recognition event was hosted by District 2 at Fiddler’s Hearth Pub on December 17th in downtown South Bend. This was the first-ever evening recognition event hosted by District 2. South Bend attorney Aladean DeRose was honored with the Professor Thomas L. Shaffer Award of Exceptional Service Pro Bono Publico. Judge Jenny PittsManier, pro bono district judicial appointee, presented the award to DeRose for her commitment to providing pro bono legal services. District 2 also recognized DISTRICT 2 • page 21 Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 Pro bono opportunities abound for those who want them in District 1 Anyone looking for an opportunity to provide pro bono legal services in District One has a variety of opportunities and a new program. When District One by-laws were revised and updated to conform with changes in the federal Form 990 rules, the title of the Indiana First Judicial District Pro Bono Committee, Inc. was officially shortened to NWI Volunteer Lawyers, Inc. 2009 saw the addition of mortgage foreclosure defense and mediation to the pro bono menu, which also features a formal guardian ad litem program, an adult guardianship program, a courtbased pro se family law clinic, and an annual Talk to a Lawyer Today event on the Martin Luther King holiday. Volunteers tackle a variety of legal issues including family law, predatory lending, trademark/copyright, quiet title, adoption, bankruptcy, housing and employment. Sixty-two attorneys, including one bankruptcy trustee and a Superior Court trial judge, attended the Supreme-Courtsponsored foreclosure training in July. Seventeen attorneys also attended the special training for mediators. When asked if they were willing to provide pro bono services to foreclosure litigants, not one of the participants in either part of the day declined. On the evening of the same day, dozens of pro bono attorneys and their children enjoyed a buffet dinner and a Gary SouthShore Railcats minor league baseball game at the First District’s annual awards night. Indiana Court of Appeals Judge Melissa May, who also chairs the Indiana Pro Bono Commission, did the honors not only at the dinner but also tossed out the ceremonial first pitch. Joanne Baitup Kagler, a bankruptcy attorney who had taken 13 cases and donated over 100 hours of her time in two years, received the 2009 Richard P. Komyatte “Access to Justice Award.” The Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Photo by Patrick Galvin By Judith Stanton, District 1 Plan Administrator Judge Melissa May throws out first pitch at RailCats game Lake County Bar Association Bankruptcy Section, chaired by Attorney Gordon Gouveia, was honored for having represented 246 clients since the First District program began in 2001. All in all, during the prior year 234 attorneys from Lake, Porter, LaPorte, Jasper, Newton, Pulaski and Starke Counties contributed almost 1900 hours of pro bono services valued at over $283,000.00. Value to the clients…..immeasurable!!! We profoundly thank all of them. In October NWI volunteer lawyers were honored at a judicial reception hosted by the Chief Judge John Pera, Lake Superior Court, as part of the first annual national Celebration of Pro Bono sponsored by the ABA, the NLADA, and hundreds of state and local benches, bars, and volunteer attorney projects. Family law practice in at least one NWI county has also made strong moves towards a more collaborative, cooperative process with the implementation of new local rules in Lake County. The pro bono office is hoping that once the new procedures take hold and, hopefully, family law issues begin to be March 17, 2010 resolved in a less contentious manner, focused on the well-being of children and protecting them from bitter interparental conflicts, more attorneys will consider taking a family law case pro bono. On the other hand, maybe if more practitioners who don’t currently practice in family law would join in and follow the more cooperative approach from the outset, who knows what a new legal world might ensue. Unfortunately, as is true in other areas of the state, the seven counties of NW Indiana are drowning in foreclosures. Defendants still need representation for the newly mandated settlement conferences. Demand for other legal and social services escalated as the economy tanked. The legal needs of the poor study recently completed as a collaborative project of the Indiana State Bar Association’s Pro Bono Committee, the Indiana Bar Foundation, and Indiana Legal Services, points to consumer and housing issues as bubbling more and more to the top … and still we don’t fulfill the promise of “equal access” to our legal system.■ 7 Celebrating high pro bono participation rate in southeast Indiana By Frank J. Cardis, District 12 Plan Administrator On October 30, 2009, attorneys in southeast Indiana convened at the Belterra Casino Resort & Spa for the Legal Volunteers attorney recognition dinner. This date was selected to coincide with the inaugural National Pro Bono Celebration. Several members of the judiciary joined approximately 50 attorneys and their guests in recognizing the honorees. Notably Senior Judge G. Michael Witte was recognized with Judge Alison Frazier, Judicial Chair of District 12, Judge G. Michael Witte, Pro Bono Leadership Award recipient, and Frank Cardis, Plan Administrator at October awards dinner at Belterra. the Pro Bono Leadership Award for his leadership of the District 12 Pro Bono Program as judicial appointee. Thomas Blondell of Lawrenceburg was the first recipient of the Jack L. Kellerman Pro Bono Service Award, which acknowledges the attorney volunteering the highest number of pro bono hours. Blondell contributed in excess of 300 hours of service. Kristen Weiler of Batesville received the Distinguished Pro Bono Service Award, offering nearly 300 hours of service herself. Attorneys Joe Colussi of Madison, Barbara Wyly of Bright, and Barbara Simmons of Oldenburg received the Excellence in Pro Bono Service Award for volunteering more than 100 hours of pro bono service. Seven attorneys were recognized for contributing 50 or more hours of service, including Heidi Kendall-Sage of Madison, Matthew Zerbe, Frank Cardis, Martin DeJulia, Douglas Garner, Douglas Holland, and Michael Sarapata, all of Lawrenceburg. Mary Jean Stotts and Jennifer Joas, partners in the Madison firm Joas & Stotts, were recognized with the outstanding firm award. Fifty-three attorneys across the district Frank Cardis, Plan Administrator; Thomas Blondell, Jack L. Kellerman Pro Bono Service Award recipient; and Judge Alison Frazier, Judicial Chair of District 12 at October awards dinner at Belterra. accepted referrals from the program. That group represents more than 40% of all attorneys registered across the five-county area. Removing judges, prosecutors and full-time government attorneys, more than 60% of eligible attorneys accepted referrals. The banquet provided more than an opportunity to honor volunteers and socialize with other members of the bar; it also served as a demonstration of the commitment of Southeast Indiana attorneys to provide legal services to the economically disadvantaged and underserved.■ Volunteer Lawyer Program helps distressed New Albany and District 14 By Amy W. Roth, District 14 Plan Administrator For most of us in the not-for-profit world, especially those who work with a lower-income population, the current situation of our national economy has caused some major problems. Job cuts mean that more people than ever qualify for pro bono legal assistance, and the stress of less money (and all the satellite issues that causes) has increased the incidence of domestic violence. Our pro 8 bono caseload is heavy with abuse cases. Moreover, District 14 is a “border” district, with its two most populous counties right on the Ohio River across from Louisville, Kentucky, linked by bridges across the river. Public housing shortages in Louisville have resulted in a heavy migration of families from Kentucky to Indiana. All this is to say that this office has been increasingly swamped with pleas for help. At the same time, of course, the economy has also affected attorneys. Although our faithful pro bono roster of lawyers has been willing to continue to take cases, few new recruits are stepping up to help. How to cope? For starters, we try to take the long view and stay optimistic— we keep on doing what we are called to do, keeping eyes open for possibilities to be innovative without being reckless, to evaluate our clients carefully so that attorneys can work efficiently to help solve their problems, and to realize that we cannot save the world. We have to DISTRICT 14 • page 22 Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 Medicaid client delivers insight for District 6 By Christianne Brock, District 6 Plan Administrator Gordon Stafford, Community-AtLarge representative for District 6 Access to Justice, contributes a unique perspective and a personal touch to District 6. While most pro bono volunteers have law degrees or legal experience, Stafford provides District 6 with insight from the client’s point of view. Stafford grew up on his family’s farm. One morning, he woke up planning to start the day’s work as usual, but he found he couldn’t get his foot into his work boot. That afternoon, doctors had to amputate his leg due to complications with diabetes. After the surgery, Stafford started the process to receive Medicaid support. He couldn’t afford to hire a lawyer at the time, so he worked pro se--he represented himself in his case. Despite his best efforts, he was denied help. When Angie Dorsey, formerly with Indiana Legal Services in Anderson, met Stafford, Stafford had already represented himself in his original hearing to obtain Medicaid support. “Typically, I didn’t represent clients on appeal pro bono,” said Dorsey. “But Gordon impressed me. He convinced me to look at his documents and his record. He presented a great case. He had taken his case as far as he could, and it would be very difficult to qualify for Medicaid without legal representation. I took his case on appeal, and we won.” “Gordon is someone I’ve always admired,” said Dorsey. “He went from what he thought would be a normal work day to a life-altering medical situation. Yet he remains positive. He was a great advocate for himself, and now he is a great advocate for others who experience similar hardship,” said Dorsey. She recommended Stafford for participation in pro bono advocacy when District 6 Access to Justice, Inc., got started in 2000. “The Board very much appreciates Gordon’s active participation in pro bono in District 6. His perspective and input as someone who has been through all aspects of the process as a client are invaluable,” said Hon. Marianne Vorhees, District 6 judicial appointee. “I was one of the original board members,” said Stafford. “I’ve been involved for about nine years. I try to help people out and let lawyers know what’s going on. I give my perspective to the lawyers. People tell me about their struggles and their need for legal assistance. My goal is to have the legal help there for them when they need it.” For the most part, Stafford said he has been very pleased with the efforts of District 6. However, true to Stafford’s tenacity, he constantly strives to improve the program. “I would like to see more participation in some of the smaller, rural counties. There’s a lot of need in those areas. People I talk to have real issues. They’ve felt like they’ve had the short end, but they can’t afford a lawyer to resolve the situation. This is a program that would help. We just need to get the word out, and let them know what’s available.”■ Pro bono attorneys help in healthcare crises By Timothy Peterson, District 4 Plan Administrator It is not often recognized and appreciated that attorneys perform life-saving work. During 2009 District 4, however, has assisted in organizing local attorneys to assist clients in maneuvering through the legal system in a variety of lifesaving health care matters. The Indiana District 4 Pro Bono Corporation worked with other local stakeholders-- including Family Services, the Lafayette office of Indiana Legal Services, Legal Aid Corporation of Tippecanoe County, Wabash Center and Wabash Valley Hospital--in forming the Tippecanoe Adult Guardianship Services (TAGS) program. The TAGS program originated as part of the statewide Indiana Adult Guardianship Services Project directed by Rebecca Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Pryor of the Indiana ARC and funded by the Indiana FSSA Division of Disability and Rehabilitative Services. TAGS was organized to establish guardianships for indigent and developmentally disabled adults who need assistance in managing their healthcare and other personal matters. The Indiana District 4 Pro Bono Corporation assisted in meeting with other stakeholders in establishing the TAGS program strategic plan and in recruiting local attorneys to assist in filing guardianships for the wards accepted into the program. District 4 also organized a CLE program to familiarize local attorneys with the creation and organization of the TAGS program and with the local probate procedures involved in forming adult guardianships in Tippecanoe County. The TAGS program has already succeeded March 17, 2010 in establishing temporary guardianships for a variety of indigent adults who would not have had anyone to manage their healthcare decisions without the assistance of the TAGS guardians and pro bono attorneys. Indiana District 4 has also assisted in finding pro bono attorneys to draft special needs trusts for a variety of critical health situations. In one case in particular, Renee Congdon, an associate at the Lafayette law firm of Stuart & Branigan, LLP, assisted in establishing a trust for a pro bono client who needed a kidney transplant. Similar special needs trusts have been drafted for a variety of older adults in need of services by pro bono attorneys recruited by District 4 over the last few years—showing that pro bono work frequently can make a life and death difference for needy adults. ■ 9 Chris Jackson: reading the fine print By Dan Grossman, Indiana Pro Bono Commission intern Be honest: When was the last time you read your bank statement from start to finish? How about your mortgage paperwork? Your credit card statement? If you are anything like the vast majority of consumers, investors and government officials, the answer is, “Never.” “Nobody reads,” said Chris Jackson, a private practitioner in Indianapolis. “No one understands this [financial] stuff.” Jackson has built a practice around helping clients who received defective mortgages. Over the past few decades, the once straightforward line that connected a lender seeking a quality customer to a borrower seeking a reasonable mortgage has become a maze of competing players and interests, opaque transactions and byzantine financial instruments. Banks have been a major contributor to this situation. By packaging mortgages into securities and dumping them on investors, banks replaced the old ethic of selecting quality customers with a new ethic of amassing a large quantity of customers. More loans equal more securities equal more revenue, so banks hired brokers and gave them a mission: make as many loans as possible, to whomever, at whatever rate. Meanwhile, the proliferation of financial babel—the documents, statements and forms that are as time-consuming as they are tedious—led to a nation unwilling or unable to comb the fine print for ambiguities or mistakes. Borrowers put their trust in the broker, the expert, so when the lender seemed to offer a 30-year fixed loan that was actually a ballooning adjustable rate mortgage, borrowers smiled and signed their way into the illusion of secure homeownership. The consequences have been dire. As interest rates rose, homeowners started to default, home prices plummeted, refinancing became impossible, the market for securities froze, and the whole system collapsed like dominoes, leaving thousands of homeowners in foreclosure, confused, and in need of an attorney. 10 Attorney Work After graduating from Indiana University Law School, Chris Jackson began her career as a white collar criminal investigator in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Today, she works as a consumer law attorney, and in recent months her main focus has been representing homeowners in foreclosure. Jackson helps disadvantaged clients under a practice that she calls “defending foreclosures for profit.” Jackson attacks violations in the information provided by the lender under two statutes that contain fee shifting statutes, the Truth and Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act. The violations she encounters range from minor bookkeeping infractions to predatory fraud, but whatever the violation, a favorable verdict is win-win: Jackson gets paid and the client gets his or her house back. Jackson’s scope may appear narrow (consumers who simply received bad loans are not protected as long as the lender properly disclosed) but the number of cases that do qualify is surprisingly large. Financial institutions—the creators of much of the financial babel—were in many cases the victims of their own complex schemes, making errors in the paperwork and in the process violating statutory law. “A lot of it has to with how sloppy financial institutions got with securitizing these loans,” said Jackson. Ironically, what gives Jackson work— financial institution’s sloppiness—is also what makes her job tricky. “All I need to do is get authenticated and admissible records to get a summary judgment,” said Jackson. Easier said than done. Because of securitization, these days most mortgages have passed through multiple hands, so discovering who owns the note requires Jackson to draw upon her skills as a white-collar investigator and sort through the lender’s files. Jackson has waited as long as 18 months to obtain the relevant documents from the lender. Successful consumer advocacy requires not only legal expertise, but a more understated virtue: patience. Despite the various obstacles, Jackson is shooting 100 percent: all of her cases have ended with a favorable verdict or an out of court settlement. “It’s rewarding; it’s hard to say no to some of these people; it’s fun; and it’s challenging. And I’m getting paid. What more could you ask for?” said Jackson. Training Sessions Well, she does have one more occupational wish: some company. Every day Jackson’s voicemail box overflows with pleas for assistance from needy clients, and as head of the National Association Indiana Pro Bono Commission JACKSON • page 21 ■ March 17, 2010 Have legal needs? District 3 has an app for that By Michele M. Wagner, VASIA program director in District 3 It has been a year of progress and changes for District 3 and the Volunteer Lawyer Program of Northeast Indiana (VLP). The VLP fielded over 4,200 unique calls and had 9,636 hits on its website. We placed 317 individuals with attorneys for direct representation and aided 227 additional individuals with phone advice. The 2009 Talk To A Lawyer Today event was also widely attended. The VLP hosted the event at the Allen County Public Library. Forty-five volunteer attorneys aided 124 walk-in clients and fielded 43 calls at the VLP office. District 3’s annual recognition luncheon for 2009 had the highest attendance to date. The VLP recognized 15 attorneys for 50 or more pro bono hours. Attorney Stephen P. Griebel, a partner with the firm of Van Gilder & Trzynka, was recognized with the first Outstanding Volunteer award for his commitment to pro bono legal services and his dedication and hard work on behalf of the guardianship program. Steve was also honored by the National Association of Pro Bono Professionals (NAPBPro) at the 2009 Equal Justice Conference in Orlando. He earned the national William Reese Smith award for Special Services to pro bono. We are proud of all the attorneys who donate their time and talents, but this year we are pleased that some received statewide recognition. Dom Gosheff of Baker & Daniels in Fort Wayne was recognized with a Pro Bono Publico award by the Indiana Bar Foundation for his work with the guardianship program. The firm of Van Gilder & Trzynka also received a Pro Bono Publico award from the Indiana Bar Foundation for its dedication to pro bono legal services. Every member of this firm has participated in local pro bono projects. David Van Gilder is the current VLP Board president and is one of its founding members. Other members of the firm include Ann Trzynka, Stephen Griebel, Dustin Roach, Michael Setlak and Andrew Simmons. The VLP welcomed several new staff Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Andrew Simmon, Ann Trzynka, David Van Gilder, Michael Setlack and Steve Griebel of the award-winning Van Gilder & Trzynka firm with Chief Justice Randall Shepard members this year. Jennifer Miller joined us in August 2009 as bookkeeper and intake specialist. Jennifer’s compassion makes her a perfect fit for the VLP. Terra Ward joined the staff of the guardianship program in January of 2009 as Volunteer Coordinator. Terra has a passion for helping people with disabilities. Terry McCaffrey joined the staff in November as the VLP’s new Executive Director. Terry is a Fort Wayne native and a graduate of Indiana University. He has extensive experience in the non-profit community and has worked in city government. Terry also teaches ESL in the Fort Wayne Hispanic community and is active in community theater. At the time this article is being drafted he is starring in the Arena Dinner Theater’s production of Last of the Red Hot Lovers. Terry’s knowledge of the community will help the VLP expand services to those in need. Judy Whitelock remains at the VLP. Currently, she is working with Terry during the transition of responsibilities and will be working on special projects for the VLP. The guardianship program, Volunteer Advocates for Seniors and Incapacitated Adults (VASIA), which began January 2008, has proved to be a much needed service in Allen County. VASIA took its first referral in June 2008 and in the first March 17, 2010 Chief Justice Randall Shepard with IBF pro bono award winner Dom Gosheff at Shepard Dinner 18 months became guardian for over 50 individuals and received almost two hundred referrals. VASIA has trained 25 volunteers and coordinated several community education programs regarding guardianships. VASIA held the first Family Day in the Allen County Superior Court. The Court blocked off a morning last summer and attorneys Nate Williams and Dom Gosheff conducted five guardianship hearings in one hour. VASIA prepared all the Court documents and coordinated the families. Magistrate Phillip E. Houk was pleased with the outcome. Two more days are scheduled for 2010; this time DISTRICT 3 • page 22 11 Shepard Dinner celebrates a year of statewide pro bono accomplishments By Bill Brooks, freelance writer When the Hon. Randall T. Shepard took to the podium at the dinner meeting that bears his name, he reflected upon the lawyers who had only minutes before received the Indiana Pro Bono Commission’s annual award. “It’s saving families, the many stories we’ve heard tonight,” said Indiana’s Chief Justice. “This says marvelous things to Indiana citizens about what’s in the hearts and minds of Indiana lawyers.” Chief Justice Shepard said that the achievements are even more remarkable because “it’s no secret at all that we’re gathering on a day when the nation is in a period of terrible stress.” He said that stress affects all of society’s institutions “and creates tremendous pressure on not-forprofits, the legal system and legal services.” Those pressures, Chief Justice Shepard said, “threaten the very network we’re here to celebrate tonight.” He said that law firms, both large and small, are facing financial limitations “at the same time fellow citizens need us [more] than they did before. “But the response by the legal community to this double whammy,” he added, “is remarkable, and worth celebrating.”■ Award winner Michael Woody with IBF President Julie Newhouse at Shepard Dinner Chief Justice Randall Shepard with Shepard Award winner Don Leicht 12 Chief Justice Randall Shepard with Shepard Award winner Ida Coleman Lamberti Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 “Red hot” year for Legal Aid—District 11 The year 2009 started off amazingly well for District Eleven because January 19, 2009 marked the accomplishment of a goal that Legal Aid set in 2006. Every county in District Eleven hosted Talk To A Lawyer Today sites. This goal would not have been realized without Peg Polanski in Decatur County and Tom Lantz in Jackson County who coordinated the inaugural events in their counties. Thankfully, John Pushor of Bartholomew county, Amy Huffman Oliver of Brown county, and Chuck Waggoner of Jennings county generously volunteered to continue coordinating the events in their respective counties. Additionally, Legal Aid’s staff, namely Shannon Carder, Pamela Cleary, Karina Miller, Peggy Purcell, Detria Tate and Sandy Wilson, volunteered their day off to make Talk To A Lawyer Today 2009 a success. Throughout District Eleven, on one day 36 attorneys donated 73.3 hours and assisted 25 people. In addition to the attorneys mentioned above, the following attorneys generously donated their time: Scott Andrews, Cindy Boll, Millie Corbin-Beverly, Timothy Coriden, F. Jefferson Crump, William Dillon, William Garber, Larry Greathouse, Jason Guthrie, Frank I. Hamilton, Jr., Landyn Harmon, Bradley A. Johnson, Brad Kage, Mike McIver, Stephanie Mellenbruch, Kathy Molewyk, Jason Pattison, Jerry Prall, William H. Robbins, Chad Robertson, Daniel Schuetz, Susan Sparks, Tim Staggs, Dennis Stark, John Stroh, Steve Taylor, Christopher M. Tebbe, Travis Thompson, Grant Tucker, Christa West, Alan Whitted, and Kurt Young. In June 2009 Legal Aid hosted “Back Home Again in Indiana- Guiding Homeowners Through Foreclosure” in conjunction with our annual appreciation banquets in each of our counties. Thirty-seven attorneys attended the foreclosure training. At the 2009 appreciation banquets, 72 attorneys were recognized for their contribution to pro bono service in 2008. Pro bono referrals for 2008 outpaced 2007. Thanks to the continued dedication Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Photo by Joe Harpring, TheRepublic.com. By Tammara Sparks, District 11 Plan Administrator Firefighters steady a hose near the main entrance of the United Way building, December 24, 2009. The Christmas Eve fire raged through complex, which housed three-dozen agencies, including Bartholomew county legal services. of John Pushor, Legal Aid’s Pro Bono Referral Coordinator, and to the unmatched generosity and compassion of the attorneys throughout District Eleven, 209 applicants were matched with pro bono attorneys to assist them in resolving their legal issues in 2008. The lawyers that volunteer for Legal Aid--District Eleven are to be commended for their dedication to pro bono services for the citizens of Bartholomew, Brown, Decatur, Jackson, and Jennings counties. Their services close the divide between the haves and havenots. The representation that they provide to Legal Aid’s applicants assures that District Eleven is a fair and just district where everyone is equal before the law. Attorneys recognized for their pro bono contributions in 2008 include Scott Andrews, Gene Arnholt, Jeffrey Beck, Brian Belding, Thomas Bigley Jr., Cynthia Boll, David Brinley, Robert Brown, Jay Charon, Millie Corbin- March 17, 2010 Beverly, Kathleen Coriden, Terrence Coriden, Timothy Coriden, Jefferson Crump, Timothy Day, William D. Dillon, Rodney Farrow, William Garber, Dominic Glover, Amanda Goecker, Larry Greathouse, Jason Guthrie, Frank Hamilton, Landyn Harmon, Eric Hayes, James Holland, Amy Huffman Oliver, Jeffrey Jackson, Brad Johnson, Bradley Kage, Taffanee Keys, Michael Kummerer, Thomas Lantz, Benjamin Loheide, Shari Long, C. Richard Marshall, Michael McIver, Stephanie Mellenbruch, Kathy Molewyk, Heather Mollo, Thomas Mote, David Nowak, David Paugh, Stephen Pierson, Jerry Prall, William Robbins, Joseph Robertson, John Roche, Jeffrey Rocker, Cynthia Rose, Heidi Sage, Daniel Schuetz, James Shoaf, Susan Sparks, Dennis Stark, John Stroh, Stephen Taylor, Christopher Tebbe, Steven Teverbaugh, Joyce Thayer Sword, Michael Thomasson, Travis Thompson, J. Grant Tucker, Stephen Voelker, James Voelz, Timothy Vrana, Charles Waggoner, Karl Walker, Jeffrey Washburn, Christa West, Alan Whitted, and Kurt Young. In December 2009 Legal Aid offered two opportunities for volunteer lawyers to get free continuing legal education credits by offering the “Amazingly Interesting CLE for Attorneys with a Heart.” The planned finish for 2009 was the December 31st offering. However, the December 31st session was almost canceled when Legal Aid’s offices burned in the fire at the United Way Center on Christmas Eve. And you thought I was kidding when I said that the year ended red hot. Thankfully, Chuck Dunlap, Executive Director of the Indiana Bar Foundation, saved the day and drove the DVDs down to Columbus so that the program would not have to be canceled. Needless to say, 2009 ended in chaos and 2010 started in chaos but as I write this article, things are beginning to calm down. Legal Aid-District Eleven, Inc. has been around for over 25 years and it will take more than a fire to destroy the passion for justice that drives this organization, its Board of Directors, its staff and the pro bono volunteers. However, I am secretly hoping that 2010 is not quite as eventful.■ 13 District 10 Lawyers in the Library By Kristine Kohlmeier, District 10 Pro Bono Project volunteer The District 10 Pro Bono Project strengthened and expanded its services in 2009, providing more access to the legal system for low-income residents of south-central Indiana. Initiatives include the Lawyers in the Library project and a bankruptcy clinic. In February District 10 began Lawyers in the Library at the Monroe County Public Library. Students and volunteer attorneys see people on a drop-in basis. People come with a variety of legal issues, and the volunteers are best prepared to discuss issues involving guardianship and divorce. Although the library has a set of code books and legal encyclopedias, most people are unable to use them effectively. Volunteers help direct people through Indiana self-service websites and legal forms. “Lawyers in the Library allows people to immediately talk to someone without an intake or interview. It helps people who otherwise feel desperate know that at least someone knows what’s going on, and gives them an idea of what they can do and what they should do,” said Elliot Anderson, coordinator for Lawyers in the Library. Sarah Bowman, Adult and Teen Programming Coordinator of the Monroe County Public Library, noted that Lawyers in the Library helps the library provide increased access to information. The library has always provided forms, but librarians are unable to offer legal advice. For people who have low literacy skills and are stressed, Lawyers in the Library has helped greatly. “There’s a real benefit for us not only to provide forms, but to tell people that there are people at the library at regular times who can help.” District 10 also started a bankruptcy clinic project with the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. Professor Dennis Long of the law school recruited seven teams of two students each to do seven bankruptcies for District 10 pre-qualified clients in Monroe County. District 10 DISTRICT 10 • page 20 HELP for the homeless in Bloomington By Jacob Atz, Shalom HELP Legal Clinic Coordinator Access to free legal services has never been greater in Bloomington thanks to more than 100 lawyers and law students who have volunteered at the Shalom HELP Legal Clinic this past year. As an alternative to full-representation services available through Indiana Legal Services and District 10 Pro Bono Project, walk-in clients of the HELP (Homeless Experience Legal Protection) clinic can expect to sit down with an attorney that same afternoon and receive legal advice to help them handle their situation without a full-time lawyer. The Shalom HELP Legal Clinic was established in May 2008 and provides legal assistance to the homeless and low-income communities in and around Bloomington. The HELP Clinic is an intake service designed to translate client matters into legal issues for resolution by licensed area attorneys. The clinic is prepared to provide services in all civil legal matters, including family law, housing, probate, personal property disputes, driver’s license restoration and employment. H.E.L.P. began in New Orleans in early 2004, when a newly appointed 14 Volunteer attorneys and law student discuss matters during a Friday afternoon legal clinic. federal district court judge, Judge Jay Zainey, accompanied his fellow judges to serve a meal at a local shelter. While serving the meal, Judge Zainey began to think how much more an attorney could do for the shelter clients, and how that kind of service could change people’s lives. With that simple but electrifying thought, H.E.L.P. was born. Judge Zainey began to round up volunteer lawyers to staff a weekly clinic at the shelter, and had more success than he had ever imagined. Soon he had hundreds of lawyers, clinics in more than one shelter, and the desire to do even more. H.E.L.P. Indiana Pro Bono Commission H.E.L.P. • page 20 ■ March 17, 2010 Increased awareness strengthens pro bono service By Vicki Williams, District 5 Plan Administrator Over all, District 5 had an excellent year in 2009. Our statistics improved in every area – more applications taken, more cases placed, more attorneys taking pro bono cases. We continue to receive referrals from individuals and agencies as they become familiar with our schedule including judges, clerks, CASA offices, Child Support offices and welfare offices as well as from lawyers themselves. As always, custody cases continue to be our most difficult to place, although we do take those applications and assign a significant number of them. In addition, Donald Leicht’s program of arbitration in Howard and Cass counties has substantially increased the service we are able to provide clients in those areas, as well as other types of family law cases. In 2009 Leicht was the co-recipient of the Randall T. Shepard Award for excellence in pro bono. The Dechert Law Firm in Kokomo received one of the Indiana Bar Foundation’s pro bono publico awards. We were extremely proud that our small, rural district received both of these prestigious awards. We are also proud of Randy Head, Cass County, who spearheaded and organized our Talk to a Lawyer Today program. In 2009 District 5 hosted foreclosure seminars in Kokomo and Wabash and combined them with pro bono appreciation dinners to which all attorneys in our District were invited. As a result 30 lawyers were trained to represent clients in foreclosure cases. We would like to extend a special thank you to Judge Thomas Perrone, Cass County Superior Court, for his years of dedicated service as the judicial appointee on our Pro Bono Committee. When I first began as Plan Administrator for District 5, I was tremendously grateful for Judge Perrone’s willingness to help me with any questions I had or information I needed. I look forward to working with Judge Robert McCallen III, Wabash Circuit Court, who is our new judicial appointee. I feel fortunate that our Committee replaced one judicial appointee who was willing to go above and beyond in supporting pro bono with another. Our district has extended its reach and its services since we started our program. Our goal is to continue that improvement.■ District Pro Bono Plan Administrators District One Judith H. Stanton, Esq. NWI Volunteer Attorneys, Inc. 651 E. Third Street P.O. Box 427 Hobart, IN 46342 219-945-1799 866-945-1799 219-945-0995(f) probono@hobartlaw.net District Four Timothy E. Peterson, Esq. Indiana Legal Services-Lafayette 639 Columbia Street P.O. Box 1455 Lafayette, IN 47902 765-423-5327 800-382-7581 765-423-2252(f) Tim.peterson@ilsi.net District Two Timi S. Sloat, Esq. The Volunteer Lawyer Network Inc. P.O. Box 1358 117 1/2 N. Main Street South Bend, IN 46624 (574) 277-0075 (574) 277-2055 (fax) volunteerinc@att.net District Five Vicki Williams Indiana Legal Services—Lafayette 639 Columbia Street P.O. Box 1455 Lafayette, IN 47902 800-382-7581 Vicki.williams@ilsi.net District Six Christianne Brock, Esq. District 6 Access to Justice, Inc. P.O. Box 324 New Castle, IN 47362 (765) 521-6979 (765) 521-0790 (fax) (800) 910-4407 district6access@hotmail.com District Three Terry McCaffery Volunteer Lawyer Program of Northeast Indiana 927 S. Harrison Fort Wayne, IN 46802 (260) 407-0917 (260) 407-7137 (fax) terry@vlpnei.org Indiana Pro Bono Commission District Seven Sheriden Thompson District 7 Pro Bono Organization P.O. Box 3342 Terre Haute, IN 47803 812-478-2666 812-232-0870(f) Dist7probono@joink.com ■ March 17, 2010 District Eight Laurie Beltz Boyd, Esq. Heartland Pro Bono Council 151 N. Delaware St., Suite 1800 Indianapolis, IN 46204 317-614-5304 317-631-9775(f) Laurie.boyd@ilsi.net District Nine Tammy Hopkins District 9 Pro Bono Commission P.O. Box 94 Richmond, IN 47375 800-935-5053 d9probono@yahoo.com District Ten Diane Walker, Esq. District 10 Pro Bono Project P.O. Box 8382 Bloomington, IN 47407 812-339-3610 812-339-3629(f) dist10probono@gmail.com District Eleven Tammara Sparks, Esq. Legal Aid-District Eleven, Inc. P.O. Box 766 806 Jackson St. Columbus, IN 47202-0766 877-378-0358 812-372-3948(f) lade@iquest.net District Twelve Frank Cardis, Esq. Legal Volunteers of Southeast Indiana, Inc. 318 N. Walnut Street Lawrenceburg, IN 47025 812-537-0123 877-237-0123 812-537-7090(f) District12probono@ legalvolunteers.com District Thirteen Beverly Corn, Esq. Scott Wylie, Esq. Volunteer Lawyer Program of Southwestern Indiana 123 NW 4th Street, Suite 618 Evansville, IN 47708 812-434-4886 812-434-4889(f) bcorn@courtbuilding.com rswylie@courtbuilding.com District Fourteen Amy W. Roth Legal Volunteers, District 14 P.O. Box 94 New Albany, IN 47151 812-949-2292 812-949-2334(f) Probono14@sbcglobal.com 15 New programs on the horizon By Tammy Hopkins, District 9 Plan Administrator It has been a productive year for District 9. Talk to a Lawyer Today on Martin Luther King day was very successful with a record number of attorneys volunteering their time. The foreclosure information seminar was well attended by District 9 attorneys and several foreclosure cases have been placed with attorneys who attended the seminar. The total number of cases placed with volunteer attorneys more than doubled in 2009. Moreover, the Indiana Supreme Court self-service website has been a wonderful tool for clients in our district. Helping them to navigate the website and file the proper paperwork has reduced the number of applicants needing attorneys for simple divorce and custody matters. District 9 hosted a December attorney luncheon to show our appreciation to the attorneys who volunteered in the past year. Judge L. Mark Bailey of IOLTA Continued from page 5 pro bono district network and there had not been enough time to build up a sizable reserve fund. Without the generosity of Phil and Barbara Burt of Fort Wayne who stepped in personally to make a significant financial contribution to keep the IOLTA funding at a stable level, many of the pro bono districts would have not been able to operate. In addition to having such strong supporters as the Burts, we were also fortunate enough to have several years of favorable interest rates after 2003 and to be able to build up a sizable reserve fund which we are using now to get us through the current unprecedented interest rate decline. While we have not yet seen interest rates begin to recover, Indiana’s IOLTA program is certainly in a much stronger position that we were in 2003 and we anticipate being able to weather this storm and continue funding 16 District 9 appreciation luncheon honorees Michael Douglass, Brenda Wilhelm-Waggoner, Shane Edington, and Amy Noe with Judge Mark Bailey (center) the Indiana Court of Appeals was the keynote speaker. Recognition was given to Michael Douglass, Brenda WilhelmWaggoner, Amy Noe, and Shane Edington for their extraordinary efforts in ensuring that legal services are available to those people who cannot afford them. In 2010 we will be concentrating on the formation of an adult guardianship program in Wayne County and a mediation program for family law cases. With the addition of these two services in the District, we hope that more people who need legal help but cannot afford it will have a place to turn.■ to the local pro bono districts. Another significant theme from the first 10 years of IOLTA in Indiana is that the IOLTA/pro bono partnership has been a success because many different groups are involved. There are the obvious groups including the lawyers who participate in the IOLTA program as well as the lawyers that take pro bono cases. The bankers and the Indiana State Bankers Association have also supported the IOLTA program. Many local and regional banks in Indiana realize that the funds in the IOLTA program go back to their local communities and improve everyone’s lives. One banker in particular, Richard E. Belcher, President of the First Federal Savings Bank, has been an enthusiastic supporter of the IOLTA program since its inception. Belcher’s bank has consistently paid an interest rate of 6% on IOLTA accounts at his bank virtually since the program began in 1999. Especially now, when many IOLTA accounts have interest rates below .3%, this extraordinary commitment is even more amazing. While there are many more partners in this effort, including local bar associations and trial court judges, I want to mention one group that is key to the success of Indiana’s IOLTA and pro bono success—local pro bono plan administrators and their staff. The plan administrators throughout Indiana’s 14 local pro bono districts are crucial to successfully getting pro bono help to the low-income Hoosiers in need of civil legal help. The success of each local district and the state program as a whole depends on these people for their dedication and commitment to the mission. We are fortunate in Indiana to have some extremely talented and passionate people who work long hours helping to make sure that “Equal Justice Under the Law” is not just a phrase but is truly a reality for all Hoosiers. It is this combined group that will be the key to the next 10 years of IOLTA and pro bono success in Indiana.■ Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 2009 – making lemonade in District 13 By Beverly Corn and Scott Wylie, District 13 Plan Administrators A wise person once said, “When life hands you lemons, make lemonade.” 2009 was quite a challenging year for the Volunteer Lawyer Program of Southwestern Indiana. More individuals than ever found themselves in need of reduced fee or free legal assistance--while the pool of service providers did not increase. Rolling up our sleeves, District 13 knuckled down to business and became even more creative in providing volunteer opportunities. District 13 made a lot of lemonade in 2009. New projects, such as Vanderburgh County Homeless Connect, Family Court Pro Se Project, Southwestern Behavioral Wills Project, VITA/Earned Income Tax Credit Project, and Teen Court, along with well-established projects such as the monthly talk to a lawyer telephone clinic and direct case referrals, provided a diverse opportunity for lawyers to volunteer. With such a variety of volunteer opportunities, not only were legal services met but also new relationships with other community organizations were forged. As a secondary benefit, the new collaborations created during 2009 are paving the way for both improved attorney image and community recognition of all the good work that takes place in southwestern Indiana. To cap the year, four individuals from District 13 were honored with the Indiana Bar Foundation’s pro bono publico and law-related education awards during the annual Shepard Dinner in November. Judge Wayne Trockman was recognized for his dedication to the Drug Court program as well as his involvement with the local VLP. Judge Brett Neimier received an award for his work in educating families through Teen Court. Scott Wylie was also recognized for his commitment and mentoring to high school students through Teen Court. Representative Trent Van Haaften was honored for his work on the “fee waiver” bill that was passed during 2009. Those of us who serve as the Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Tammy Schmitt of Berry Plastics Corp. and Karen Scott of Volunteer Lawyers Program of Southwest Indiana work with a patient/client and his case manager to create his will. Scott Wylie, IBF pro bono award winner and District 13 co-plan administrator, with Chief Justice Randall Shepard administrators for the various pro bono districts don’t do it for the money. Likewise, pro bono work is not easy. Pro bono work is a unique blend of both taxing and rewarding. Pro bono is taxing because in years like 2009 there is so much need; each story is more compelling than the previous and each person March 17, 2010 who seeks help is more desperate than the one before. Likewise, pro bono is rewarding because there is no limit to the imagination on how to create service opportunities. 2009 was a tough year but because of the volunteers and other community agencies who joined forces, not only did District 13 survive, it thrived.■ 17 From Mideast to Midwest Guiding Indiana’s new residents By Rabeh Soofi, Ice Miller for District 8, Heartland Pro Bono Council Kabul. Damascus. Fallujah. Baghdad. Those places truly seem as distant and foreign as they sound. Hardly the kind of place one might expect to hear of ordinary teenagers hanging out with their friends, educated medical professionals running their practices, or the former hometowns of some of Indiana’s new residents. Although it may seem as though the war on terror is taking place a million miles away from Hoosier communities, the reality is that every so often, a new family comes to Indiana from a war-torn or troubled city in the Middle East, seeking safety, asylum and often times, a new life of hope, prosperity, and freedom. Certainly, there are frequent discussions on national news networks about the effects that immigration could have on jobs, education, or our communities – but what is sometimes forgotten is that for many of the dark corners of the world, America still stands as a beacon of light and a promise of opportunity. The land where with hard work and a little luck, anything can be achieved. It is not hard to understand why our great nation remains so attracSoofi tive to immigrants, whether from the Middle East, or elsewhere. Social mobility aside, America stands for something that might strike us lawyers as being quite ordinary, but is really its most valuable gem--the concept of legal procedure. A system of rules, regulations, statutes, and laws that govern all aspects of our lives, the underpinnings of which are the principles of fairness, due process, and equality on which our nation was founded. The challenge that remains, however, is the task of providing support to refugees, asylees (those seeking asylum), or others who have come to our nation. Often times, these individuals have come to us from places where the rule of law is arbitrary, succumbs to political corruption, or has entirely broken down--meaning that it might be difficult for them to navigate what can appear to be a very complex set of rules and procedures, even to obtain basic needs. Consider the case of one asylee, Miriam, an educated Iraqi pharmacist, who immigrated to Indianapolis with her family in fear for their safety due to their religious status as Christians. Or Omer, a young professional from Syria and new Hoosier, with three toddlers, targeted for providing English translation services. Or the stories of asylees and new Castleton residents Amir and Hasad, teenage boys who were looking through stacks of X-Box games outside a Baghdad marketplace, when a roadside bomb went off, killing those nearby, and wounding them with shrapnel. How does one explain to them that the fastfood chains, where they wonder if they could make a few dollars to help pay the family bills, need two references and their complete addresses for the past three years to run a credit check? The truth is that even accomplishing basic tasks--such as getting healthcare, figuring out how to domesticate foreign professional licenses in order to return to work, or navigating through the refugee/immigration process--can be daunting for newcomers to our community. The story that perhaps touches me the most is that of Ali. Ali is a collegeage young man who started work for the U.S. Army at 18 years of age. While most 18-year-olds are starting college or pursuing other career opportunities, Ali did not. For six years he worked with the U.S. forces in Pakistan, faithfully providing translation services. Fleeing the dangers and problems that followed those who have helped American forces abroad, Ali came to Indiana with the guidance and assistance of military officers, and is now enrolled in college. His greatest grievance? He is prohibited DISTRICT 8 • page 22 18 Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 Indiana University Maurer School of Law’s new Access to Justice Program In Spring 2009, Indiana University Maurer School of Law elevated its existing pro bono program into a comprehensive program to encourage each student to contribute at least 60 hours of pro bono service while in law school. The program, now called the Access to Justice Program (AJP), coordinates and develops pro bono opportunities, educates students about the value of pro bono service and administers the pro bono recognition program. AJP is staffed by two student Pro Bono Fellows, who are funded in part with the generous assistance of Baker & Daniels, LLP. Throughout the year, the Pro Bono Fellows have developed programs to raise awareness of pro bono opportunities and to encourage students to volunteer. In September, we kicked off the academic year with the second annual Pro Bono Fair, at which representatives of nearly a dozen community organizations, including District 10 Pro Bono Project, the Community Justice & Mediation Center, and Baker & Daniels, came to the law school to meet with students and answer questions regarding the legal work of their organizations. In addition, students were able to sign up to volunteer for the organizations. In conjunction with the Fair, we conducted an awards ceremony to honor the student from each class who had reported the most volunteer hours during the preceding academic year. Lauren Robel, Maurer School of Law Dean, and Carl Pebworth, Baker & Daniels Partner and Pro Bono and Public Interest Committee Chair, presented each student with his/her award. Baker & Daniels also sponsored the event. Other events in the fall included participating in the ABA’s “Celebrate Pro Bono” Week. We asked students Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ Photo/Ann Schertz Photography By Judy Reckelhoff and Megan Mullett, Pro Bono Fellows Carl Pebworth (left) and Brita Horvath (right) of Baker & Daniels celebrate pro bono with award recipients, Michelle Tanyhill – 1L, Matthew Wallace – 2L, and Kate Lee – 3L at the 2009 Pro Bono Fair. to pledge to meet the 60-hour goal and conducted a skills-building training where students who volunteer with community organizations met with social workers to discuss handling common client-interaction issues such as clients who are untruthful, miss meetings, have mental health issues, or are highly emotional. Lastly, we conducted our second “Pro Bono Stories” Panel, at which lawyers, judges, and law faculty share their pro bono experiences and the professional and personal benefits they have gained as a result of their pro bono service. Speakers on our panels included: Judge Mary Ellen Diekhoff, Monroe County Circuit Court; Monica Fennell, Executive Director, Indiana Pro Bono Commission; Allison FetterHarrott, formerly with Baker & Daniels (Indianapolis); Marc Kadish, Mayer Brown (Chicago); Patricia McKinnon, family law specialist (Indianapolis); Kendall Millard, Barnes & Thornburg (Indianapolis); Lauren Robel, Dean and Val Nolan Professor of Law, Maurer School of Law; F. Thomas Schornhorst, March 17, 2010 Professor Emeritus, Maurer School of Law; Earl Singleton, Director, Community Legal Clinic; and Alex Tanford, Professor, Maurer School of Law. We are thrilled with the strides we made during the fall semester, during which 100 Maurer students reported over 1100 pro bono hours. Engaging in tasks ranging from intake interviews to in-depth legal research to full representation, law students were able to hone their legal skills while providing a valuable service to our community. This spring we will be sustaining that momentum when we host Gerald Lopez, Professor of Law at UCLA and author of Rebellious Lawyering, as the Fuchs Lecturer, and host our third Pro Bono Stories Panel, featuring attorneys from a variety of practice areas. Information about AJP is available at http://law.indiana.edu/students/clinic/ probono. The website describes AJP events, the law school’s aspirational goal, pro bono opportunities in the Monroe County area, and more.■ 19 DISTRICT 10 Continued from page 14 has provided bankruptcy filing software, meeting space, and mentoring. Students complete petitions and fee waiver applications, help clients get mandatory credit counseling, and attend bankruptcyrelated meetings in Indianapolis. Three attorneys throughout the state have volunteered to file the petitions and represent the clients on behalf of District 10 Pro Bono Project. “Diane Walker (District 10 Pro Bono Project Plan Administrator) has been invaluable in mentoring students in their client interaction skills…Our clients are persons who could not have afforded bankruptcy legal services and would have gone without or filed pro se. All this is possible because our volunteer bankruptcy attorneys are willing to take the cases on a pro bono basis,” stated Long. The bankruptcy clinic will expand in the spring to include cases filed in New Albany. H.E.L.P. Continued from page 14 began to expand to other cities, prodded and encouraged by Judge Zainey and helped along by law firms which were volunteering in New Orleans and which had offices in other cities. Today, H.E.L.P. volunteers are providing free legal services to the homeless in over 15 cities, and the list continues to grow. Judge Zainey visited Bloomington in October 2009, along with his friend and colleague Chief Judge Frank Cristaudo of the Social Security Administration. Following a morning reception sponsored by the law school’s Public Interest Law Foundation, the judges spoke in the moot courtroom to a gathering of the local legal community. Judge Zainey spoke passionately about the growing number of H.E.L.P. clinics nationwide. He recounted numerous stories of indigent clients finding help through their local clinic and had high praise for the attorneys providing that assistance. Chief Judge Cristaudo followed with an informative discussion about the Social Security Administration generally, as well as specific information helpful to those providing services for low-income clients. The discussion was followed by a lunch reception and visit to the Friday afternoon HELP clinic. Numerous organizations sponsored the visit, including the Monroe County Bar Association, District 10 Pro Bono Project, and Shalom Community Center. The Shalom HELP Legal Clinic has recently opened a new branch to assist clients with gaining access to both Indiana state benefits and Social Security. 20 The front entrance of the Shalom HELP Legal Clinic, located at Trinity Episcopal Church in Bloomington. Its regular Friday clinic has had great success navigating the benefit systems and obtaining benefits for clients, but the need has grown for a specialized clinic with volunteers trained to handle these involved cases. The new Shalom Benefits Clinic meets this need. The Benefits Clinic will operate in a similar fashion as the legal clinic. New clients can arrive at anytime during clinic hours, without an appointment, and receive assistance. Current clients can also stop by and receive information about their case. Despite having a specialized focus, this additional clinic will provide numerous services. The primary goals of the Benefits Clinic are to provide eligibility determinations and application assistance. Eligibility determinations ensure that clients are receiving all of the benefits for which they qualify. The clinic helps clients through the application process from start to finish. This means not only assistance in filling out the application itself, but following through, and ensuring that In March 2010, District 10 will begin a new project to provide help for pro se litigants preparing forms at the Monroe County courthouse. Volunteer attorneys are being recruited for the project. District 10 continues to partner with other legal clinics in Bloomington, including the Shalom Center H.E.L.P. clinic. District 10’s programs and services continue to grow. “Our numbers have increased. People are passing word along and the courts are giving out our information,” said Anderson.■ the application clears all administrative hurdles. The Benefits Clinic can help with Social Security Disability (SSD), Social Supplemental Security Insurance (SSI), Medicaid, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), the Healthy Indiana Plan (HIP), and Food Stamps. This new clinic runs in tandem with the highly successfully Shalom HELP Legal Clinic. With each clinic operating on separate days, Bloomington’s indigent residents have increased access to legal and benefit assistance. Both clinics are open to the public. The Shalom Benefits Clinic is held every Thursday between 1 and 4 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church at the corner of Kirkwood and Grant Street in Bloomington. The Shalom HELP Legal Clinic operates every Friday between 1 and 4 p.m., also at Trinity Episcopal Church. For more information about volunteer opportunities, please contact Jacob Atz at (812) 320-3717 or Jacob@ shalomcommunitycenter.org. The Shalom HELP Legal Clinic also promotes public legal education through a partnership with the Monroe County Public Library. A monthly legal education series kicked off at the beginning of 2009, featuring six public discussions from area attorneys. The speakers covered topics including access to free legal service, landlord/tenant law, tax law, child support, divorce and advanced directives. These talks are continually broadcast by the local public access television station. For more information regarding Homeless Experience Legal Protection, go to http://www.homelesslegal protection.com.■ Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 ABA Continued from page 6 host eight new admittees, selected by raffle, from those registered at or before the admission ceremony. In another example of creative programming, lawyers in Utica, New York made use of the silver screen to spotlight the role of pro bono lawyers in providing access to justice and inspire a new generation of pro bono volunteers by screening the classic, To Kill A Mockingbird – at no charge, of course. The legal community in Indiana actively participated in the Celebration with numerous events throughout the state. District 13 held its monthly Ask a Lawyer hotline and was able to obtain a free ad in the Evansville Courier & Press in which attorneys who had donated 50 or more hours in the past year were recognized for their contribution. Legal Aid, District 11, also ran ads in local JACKSON Continued from page 10 of Consumer Advocates in Indiana, Jackson is conscious of the need to pull more attorneys into consumer law. This goal prompted her to participate in an ICLEF video (sponsored by the Indiana Supreme Court, Indiana Commission for Continuing Legal Education and Indiana Pro Bono Commission), a three-hour video that was part of this past summer’s statewide effort to recruit and train attorneys to help homeowners. In the video, Jackson explains her practice and demonstrates that assisting homeowners and making a living go hand-in-hand. Jackson hopes the video will draw attorneys into the relatively untapped area of consumer law. Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ papers to thank volunteer attorneys. Several districts held “Talk to a Lawyer” or similar hotline events. Other events included CLEs and a law school pro bono fair. The variety of events and the breadth of the sponsoring entities reflected that of the national level, with one common thread throughout: highlighting pro bono. Based on the success of the 2009 National Pro Bono Celebration and the interest expressed by our constituents, the ABA Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service will again celebrate pro bono the week of October 24-30, 2010. The Celebration website, www.celebrateprobono.org, will soon be updated with additional resources and you will be able to sign up for e-mail updates. We hope that you will celebrate with us the impact and importance of pro bono lawyers in serving those who most need assistance.■ DISTRICT 2 Jackson enjoys the unique challenges and details of each new case, and its value to the community. However, she recognizes that for many attorneys diving headfirst into foreclosure law can be an intimidating prospect, especially after watching so many borrowers, lenders and investors get injured. “There is a learning curve,” she said. “Not only do you have to teach yourself, you have to educate opposing council and educate the judge because no one really is aware that this is out there.” Fully understanding the insand-outs of consumer law requires more than three hours, but the video opens the door to a topic that is growing in both case volume and economic impact. Jackson is optimistic. Several attorneys have expressed interest in taking these types of cases, giving Jackson resources to refer surplus clients. March 17, 2010 Continued from page 6 James Milstone of St. Joseph County, Paula Michalos of Elkhart County, James Butts of Kosciusko County, and Anthony Wagner of Marshall County for their excellent pro bono work. District 2 is committed to the expansion of the program in 2010. In the coming year District 2 plans to establish a pro se clinic, expand the Ask A Lawyer events, and provide CLE opportunities to the two southern counties within our district. Certainly, the realization of these goals and the accomplishments thus far are due, almost entirely, to the amazing attorneys who have donated their valuable time to assist those who are unable to afford counsel. Thank you to all of the Indiana attorneys who have taken the Pro Bono Challenge and have committed their time and efforts to pro bono legal services.■ Difficulties Ahead Still, difficulties abound. Because Jackson and attorneys like her can only take cases in which the lender violated a fee-shifting statute, a small slice of total foreclosures, pro bono assistance remains imperative for most homeowners in foreclosure. Looking forward, the real challenge may be in preventing the next collapse by teaching people basic financial skills. But for now, Jackson and pro bono attorneys are doing their best to sift through the debris, work with displaced homeowners, and put them back into their homes. Visit http://www.in.gov/judiciary/ probono/ for pro bono district contact information.■ 21 DISTRICT 8 Continued from page 18 from employment under the terms of his student visa, and so, struggles to pay rent, utilities, and make ends meet. His asylum application remains pending, and so he remains, one young man, here alone, on his own. These are the human faces and stories of refugees and asylees that come to us from the Middle East. They are intensely personal and marked by personal tragedies, relentlessness, and, surprisingly, ordinariness--only in the sense that what most immigrants seek is truly no different than what anyone else might seek: stable employment, health, and being able to care and provide for their family and children. As lawyers, it is hard to think of how to begin to serve this category of those in need. Sometimes it seems as though the areas of the law most relevant to ordinary individuals, such as applying for health benefits, federal or state aid, immigration, or employment assistance, can be the hardest to learn, especially on a pro bono basis. This is not to say that providing pro bono services to Indiana’s refugees or asylees has not been a priority. Consider DISTRICT 3 Continued from page 11 with 10 families at a time. The VASIA staff also participates in the local guardianship council meetings, serves as a board member of the Indiana State Guardianship Association (ISGA) DISTRICT 14 Continued from page 8 be realistic about assisting not only the neediest but also those who have problems that have the best chance of being solved by the legal remedies available. Our coaching program has more validity than ever, and we are looking at ways to make this one-on-one advocacy and educational outreach effort more effective and more encompassing. We moved our office again last summer (not by choice this time) soon 22 the large-scale project undertaken by the Muslim Alliance of Indiana. On Martin Luther King Day 2009, the Muslim Alliance of Indiana announced the opening of MAI Legal Services, intended to provide Indiana residents and “modest-means” clientele with legal services based on a sliding-scale tied to income. The clinic also provides free adjustments of status services for refugees. MAI Legal Services does not limit its services to Muslims or those of Middle Eastern descent, and according to MAI Executive Director Shariq Siddiqui, the majority of MAI Legal Services’ clients are non-Muslims. Luckily, Indianapolis has no shortage of charities, entities, and organizations that are focused on providing support services to asylees and refugees, including Exodus, International Interfaith Initiative, Neighborhood Christian Legal Clinic, The Immigrant Welcome Center, RefugeeLink, and others. Although it may not be feasible for attorneys interested in providing pro bono services to take up immigration or refugee-adjustment cases on a pro bono basis, there are ample opportunities for the donation of volunteer time, resources, funds, and other vehicles for charitable giving. Participation at AskA-Lawyer or Legal Line events held by one or more of the above entities would, for example, be an excellent way to assist Indiana’s refugees and asylees from the Middle East or any other part of the world. Heartland Pro Bono Council (www.heartlandprobono.org), the lifeline for many Hoosiers in need of pro bono assistance, for example, provides a number of opportunities for attorneys who seek to contribute pro bono services. For anyone interested in more information, Laurie Beltz Boyd, Plan Administrator for Heartland, can be reached at 317631-9410 ext. 2267. It can take a new immigrant, refugee, or asylee years, decades, and in some cases, a lifetime to become accustomed to life in a new community. But even though such individuals may come to us from the other side of the world, from nations under hostile leadership, or from societies even deeply adverse to us, our core values, or our way of life, there is still nothing more rich or rewarding than the personal connection that is formed with those in need through pro bono services or charitable giving – especially to those who have come to our nation seeking help, protection, and safety.■ and is a National Certified Guardian (NCG) through National Guardianship Association (NGA). The staff received Member of the Year Award from the ISGA and Affiliate Member of the Year Award from the NGA for the work to promote guardianship issues and education. In 2010, VASIA in collaboration with the VLP, will begin operating as a separate agency and apply for the 501(c)(3) designation. Both agencies will remain housed together and continue to share resources. The separation will allow the guardianship program to offer additional services, seek its own grants and charge for some services not considered pro bono.■ after finishing our mortgage foreclosure defense trainings. And we play an active role in the Clark County Family Court project by providing pro bono mediators for pro se divorces with children. We also are actively involved in getting more mediators trained in our district. Most of all, we try to stay very practical and focused, trusting that in the future the funds will be found to continue this very important work at the level we have achieved and even to surpass it.■ LRAP Continued from page 5 Additional donations are now being accepted for the Justice Richard M. Givan Loan Repayment Assistance Program through the Indiana Bar Foundation. Checks should be made payable to the Indiana Bar Foundation, with a designation to the “Judge Givan LRAP” and should be mailed to 230 East Ohio Street, Suite 400, Indianapolis IN, 46204. Donors who prefer to make a contribution via credit card may contact the Bar Foundation at 317-269-2415.■ Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ March 17, 2010 Take the Pro Bono Pledge! There is a continuing need for pro bono legal representation for Indiana’s poor. After completing and submitting the form below you will be linked with organizations that will provide information on the pro bono civil legal opportunities in your District. You can make a difference in someone’s life today. Please take the pledge! Send this completed form to: Indiana Pro Bono Commission, 230 E. Ohio St., Suite 400, Indianapolis, IN 46204, or to the district plan administrator, or online at www.in.gov/judiciary/probono/attorneys/report-hours.html. Indiana Pro Bono Pledge I accept the pro bono pledge and am willing to take a case in the following areas: ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ Adoption ADR: Civil Mediation ADR: Domestic Relations Mediation ADR: Other Appellate Bankruptcy ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ Battered Spouse/ Children Consumer Contracts Education Employment Family Guardianship Health ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ Housing Immigration Insurance Living Wills/ Power of Attorney Non-profit Paternity Probate Your Name __________________________________________________________ Address ____________________________________________________________ City _______________________________________ State _____ Zip __________ Phone No. _____________________ Attorney No. _________________________ E-mail ______________________________________________________________ Which District Do you Serve? __________________________________________ HOMEOWNERS Continued from page 3 basis in January 2010 in Allen, Marion, and St. Joseph counties. A project manager oversees local logistical coordinators, who coordinate with pro bono attorneys, facilitators, homeowners, and lenders to schedule and take part in settlement conferences. The local coordinator’s duties include scheduling the conferences, ensuring that the logistical requirements of the conference area are met (e.g., telephone and fax services), checking that the homeowner has completed all necessary paperwork and gathered the required documents, and collecting data to assist the project manager in compiling Indiana Pro Bono Commission ■ statistics regarding the conferences’ successes and failures. The local coordinator is also required to reach out to all homeowners in newly-filed foreclosure cases, ensuring that they have been personally contacted about their rights within the first two weeks of a foreclosure filing. Pro bono attorneys and facilitators who have received training through the “Back Home In Indiana” program are encouraged to take part in this project. Through funding from the IHCDA, pro bono attorneys are reimbursed up to $25 per conference for reasonable expenses (parking, meals, and office supplies, for example), while facilitators receive $150 per every four settlement conferences conducted. A completion incentive of March 17, 2010 ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ ❏ Protective Order SSD SSI Taxation Unemployment Other ❏ I am willing to act as a mentor in the following area of law ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ❏ I am willing to volunteer on my District Pro Bono Committee $150 is also available to attorneys and logistical coordinators if the settlement conference is “successful” – that is, if an agreement is reached that will prevent the lender from filing foreclosure proceedings for at least six months. If the pilot projects in Allen, Marion, and St. Joseph counties are successful, the system will be implemented on a state-wide basis beginning in early 2011. Any attorneys, judges, or licensed mediators who wish to assist with this project should contact David Remondini, Chief Deputy Executive Director of the Division of State Court Administration, dremondi@courts.state. in.us. More information can be found at the Mortgage Foreclosure Task Force website, www.courts.in.gov/home.■ 23 Indiana Pro Bono Commission Judicial Appointees DISTRICT ONE Hon. Elizabeth Tavitas Lake Superior Court, Civil 3 15 W. 4th Avenue Gary, IN 46402 219-881-6157 DISTRICT TEN Hon. Mary Ellen Diekhoff Monroe Circuit Court #5 301 N. College Avenue Bloomington, IN 47904 812-349-2615 812-349-2791(f) DISTRICT TWO Hon. Jenny Pitts Manier St. Joseph Superior Court 219 Lincolnway West Mishawaka, IN 46544 574-256-6219 574-245-6691(f) DISTRICT ELEVEN Hon. Judith Stewart Brown Circuit Court Courthouse P.O. Box 85 Nashville, IN 47448-0085 (812) 988-7557 (812) 988-5515 (f) DISTRICT THREE Hon. Daniel G. Heath Allen Superior Court 715 S. Calhoun Street, # 316 Fort Wayne, IN 46802 260-449-7646 260-449-3353 DISTRICT FOUR Hon. Rex W. Kepner Benton Circuit Court 706 E. 5th Street Fowler, IN 47944 765-884-0370 765-884-2027(f) DISTRICT FIVE Hon. Robert R. McCallen, III Wabash Circuit Court 49 W. Hill Street Wabash, IN 46992 260-563-0661 260-569-1374(f) DISTRICT SIX Hon. Marianne L. Vorhees Delaware Circuit Court #1 100 W. Washington Street Muncie, IN 47305 765-747-7780 765-741-5792(f) DISTRICT TWELVE Hon. Alison Frazier Jefferson Superior Court 300 E. Main Street Madison, IN 47250 (812) 265-8914 (812) 265-8951 (f) DISTRICT SEVEN Hon. Joseph D. Trout Clay Circuit Court 609 E. National Ave., Room 314 Brazil, IN 47834 812-448-9036 812-448-8255(f) DISTRICT THIRTEEN Hon. Dean Sobecki Daviess Superior Court 200 E. Walnut Street Washington, IN 47501 812-254-8671 812-254-8645(f) DISTRICT EIGHT Hon. William J. Hughes Hamilton Superior Court #3 One Hamilton County Square, #311 Noblesville, IN 46060 317-776-9709 317-776-8587(f) Hon. Wayne S. Trockman Vanderburgh Superior Court Courts Building, Civic Center Complex 825 Sycamore, #116 Evansville, IN 47708 812-435-5407 812-435-5635(f) DISTRICT NINE Hon. Darrin M. Dolehanty Wayne Superior Court 3 301 E. Main Street Richmond, IN 47374 765-973-9269 DISTRICT FOURTEEN Hon. Vicki Carmichael Clark Superior Court #1 501 E. Court Avenue Jeffersonville, IN 47130 812-285-6294 812-285-6258(f)